ELISA vs Western Blot: Which Technique Should You Choose?
Quick Answer
ELISA and Western Blot are both antibody-based protein detection methods. ELISA is faster, higher throughput and gives you a precise quantitative number from complex samples. Western Blot separates proteins by size first, so it tells you whether your antibody is binding the right molecular weight band — making it the gold standard for protein identity confirmation. Use ELISA to measure how much; use Western Blot to confirm what.
ELISA vs Western Blot at a glance
If you only have time for one table, it's this one. ELISA wins on speed, sensitivity, throughput and quantitation. Western Blot wins on molecular weight confirmation and post-translational modification analysis. Most well-equipped labs use both — Western Blot to validate the antibody, ELISA to measure samples at scale.
| Feature | ELISA | Western Blot |
|---|---|---|
| Primary use | Quantify a protein in a complex sample | Confirm a protein's identity and molecular weight |
| Format | 96-well plate, capture + detection antibody pair | Gel electrophoresis → membrane transfer → antibody probing |
| Output | Quantitative (pg/mL, ng/mL) | Semi-quantitative (band intensity) |
| Sensitivity | pg/mL to ng/mL | ng to low μg |
| Specificity | Antibody specificity only | Antibody specificity + molecular weight verification |
| Throughput | ~96 samples per plate | 10–20 samples per gel |
| Time to result | 3–4 hours | 1–2 days |
| Sample required | ~10–100 μL per well | ~20 μg total protein per lane |
| Cost per sample | Low (£3–£10 with kit) | Moderate (£15–£40 including reagents and time) |
| Detects post-translational modifications | Only with PTM-specific antibodies | Yes, visible as MW shift or with PTM-specific antibodies |
| Requires sample purification | No (works in serum, plasma, lysate) | No, but lysate must be denatured and reduced |
What is ELISA?
ELISA (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) is an antibody-based test performed in a 96-well polystyrene plate. The most common format — sandwich ELISA — uses a capture antibody immobilised on the plate to pull the target protein out of solution, then an enzyme-linked detection antibody binds a second epitope on the same molecule. A colorimetric or chemiluminescent substrate converts the antibody binding into a quantitative signal.
ELISA's strengths are speed, throughput and precision. A standard 96-well plate processes 40+ unknowns in duplicate against a 7-point standard curve, all in 3–4 hours. Modern kits deliver pg/mL limits of detection in serum or plasma without sample purification, and a 4-parameter logistic fit yields a precise concentration in ng/mL or pg/mL.
For a step-by-step protocol, see our Sandwich ELISA Protocol Guide. For the variants (sandwich, competitive, direct, indirect, multiplex), see Types of ELISA.
What is Western Blot?
A Western Blot (also called immunoblot) separates proteins by molecular weight using SDS-PAGE gel electrophoresis, transfers them to a membrane, and then probes the membrane with antibodies. Because the proteins are size-separated before antibody binding, you can see exactly what molecular weight your antibody is recognising — making Western Blot the gold standard for confirming antibody specificity.
Western Blot's strengths are molecular weight verification and post-translational modification analysis. If your antibody is non-specific, the Western will show multiple bands or a band at the wrong MW. If the protein you're tracking has been cleaved, phosphorylated, glycosylated or ubiquitinated, the Western reveals it as a shift in the apparent molecular weight.
The trade-off is time and throughput. A standard Western runs 1–2 days from lysis to imaging, and most blots accommodate 10–20 lanes — fine for validation, slow for sample quantification at scale.
Key differences in detail
1. Quantitative vs semi-quantitative
ELISA produces a precise number from a calibration curve. You can say "Sample A contains 47.3 pg/mL of TNF-α." Western Blot produces a band whose intensity correlates with abundance, but the curve is non-linear and depends on exposure time, transfer efficiency and ECL substrate freshness. You can say "Sample A has more protein than Sample B" but giving an absolute concentration is unreliable without spike-in standards.
2. Molecular weight information
ELISA can't tell you the molecular weight of what it's binding. If your antibody cross-reacts with a degradation product or a related family member, ELISA will happily count both as your target. Western Blot resolves the size of the captured protein and surfaces non-specific binding immediately — this is why Western Blot is essential during antibody validation.
3. Sample format
ELISA accepts samples in their native state: serum, plasma, urine, cell culture supernatant, lysates in non-denaturing buffer. Western Blot requires the sample to be denatured (boiled in SDS + reducing agent), which unfolds the protein and disrupts native epitopes — meaning an antibody that works on Western may not work on ELISA, and vice versa.
4. Throughput
A skilled operator can run 4 ELISA plates per day, quantifying ~320 unknowns. A skilled operator can run 2 Western Blots per day, semi-quantifying ~30 samples. For any study tracking many subjects (clinical samples, time courses, dose response curves), ELISA wins on throughput by an order of magnitude.
5. Antibody requirements
ELISA needs two antibodies binding two different epitopes that survive native conditions. Western Blot needs one antibody that recognises the denatured protein. This is one reason Western Blot is often easier to develop for novel targets — only one antibody to optimise.
Sensitivity & quantitation
ELISA is more sensitive than Western Blot for the simple reason that the signal builds up in a single well over time, whereas Western Blot signal is spread across the area of a band. Typical limits of detection:
| Detection method | ELISA LoD | Western Blot LoD |
|---|---|---|
| HRP-TMB (colorimetric) | 10–100 pg/mL | 1–10 ng (loaded per lane) |
| Biotin-streptavidin-HRP | 1–10 pg/mL | 0.5–5 ng (per lane) |
| Chemiluminescence (CLIA / ECL) | 0.1–1 pg/mL | 0.1–1 ng (per lane) |
| Fluorescent (multiplex) | 5–50 pg/mL per analyte | 0.5–5 ng (per lane) |
If you need to detect a low-abundance cytokine (sub-pg/mL) from limited patient serum, ELISA — particularly a CLIA format — is the only practical option. If you need to verify that a transfection actually expressed your construct, even a basic ECL Western Blot at 1 ng sensitivity is more than enough.
Throughput, time and cost
For a real-world comparison, here's the same experiment — measuring TNF-α in 80 patient serum samples — run by both methods:
| Metric | Sandwich ELISA | Western Blot |
|---|---|---|
| Plates / gels needed | 1 plate (80 samples in duplicate) | 5 gels (16 samples each) |
| Hands-on time | ~2 hours | ~12 hours over 2 days |
| Total elapsed time | ~4 hours | ~2 days |
| Reagent cost | ~£300 (one kit) | ~£1,000 (5 gels, transfer, ECL, antibodies) |
| Output | 80 precise concentrations | 80 band intensities, semi-quantitative |
The throughput gap is why ELISA dominates clinical and pharmaceutical quantification while Western Blot dominates basic research and antibody validation.
Sample preparation requirements
The two techniques have different sample requirements that often determine which is feasible for a given experiment:
| Sample type | Works for ELISA? | Works for Western Blot? |
|---|---|---|
| Serum / plasma | Yes, often without dilution | Yes, but high-abundance proteins (albumin, IgG) mask low-abundance targets — usually requires depletion |
| Cell lysate (RIPA buffer) | Yes, dilute 1:5 to 1:20 | Yes, the standard input |
| Tissue lysate | Yes, normalise by total protein | Yes, the standard input |
| Cell culture supernatant | Yes, often without dilution | Possible after concentration (e.g. TCA precipitation) |
| Urine / CSF | Yes | Possible after concentration |
| Conformation-specific antibodies | Use ELISA (native protein) | Will not work (denatured protein loses epitope) |
| Linear epitope antibodies | Use either | Use either |
When to choose each (and when to use both)
Use ELISA when…
- You need a precise quantitative result (ng/mL or pg/mL)
- You have many samples and limited time
- You're measuring a soluble protein in serum, plasma or cell media
- You need pg/mL sensitivity
- You're running a clinical study, dose response, or time-course
- Your antibody recognises a native (non-denatured) epitope
Use Western Blot when…
- You need to confirm the molecular weight of the protein your antibody is binding
- You're validating a new antibody for the first time
- You're tracking a post-translational modification visible as a MW shift
- You need to distinguish multiple isoforms or splice variants
- Your antibody only works on denatured protein
- You're confirming knockdown / knockout / overexpression of a target
When to use both
For most rigorous protein research projects, the answer is "both, in this order":
- Validate by Western Blot first. Confirm that your antibody recognises a band at the expected molecular weight in the cell or tissue type you're working with. Compare wildtype vs knockout, or untreated vs siRNA, to confirm specificity.
- Quantify by ELISA second. Once you trust the antibody, switch to ELISA for sample-scale quantification. ELISA's pg/mL sensitivity and 96-sample throughput are exactly what large studies need.
This validate-then-quantify pattern is the standard workflow in pharma R&D and increasingly in academic immunology labs.
Recommended kits and reagents
Assay Genie supplies validated reagents for both techniques:
PharmaGenie ELISA Kits
High-sensitivity pre-coated sandwich ELISA kits validated to ISO 9001:2015 with NIBSC standard calibration. 5,000+ targets.
Explore PharmaGenie →Multiplex ELISA Kits
Measure 4–100+ analytes per well — perfect for cytokine panels when sample volume is limited.
Browse Multiplex →Primary Antibodies (WB-validated)
Antibodies validated specifically for Western Blot applications across all major signalling pathways and biomarkers.
Browse Antibodies →Antibody Pairs (DIY ELISA + WB)
SuperSet matched antibody pairs work for both DIY sandwich ELISA and Western Blot validation.
Explore SuperSet →Frequently asked questions
Which is more sensitive, ELISA or Western Blot?
Which is more accurate?
Can I use the same antibody for ELISA and Western Blot?
Is ELISA quantitative or qualitative?
Is Western Blot quantitative?
Can ELISA detect protein modifications like phosphorylation?
Why do scientists use both ELISA and Western Blot?
How long does a Western Blot take?
How long does an ELISA take?
Which is cheaper per sample?
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